The International Association of Insurance Supervisors (IAIS) announced it has updated its core insurance principles at its annual meeting in Seoul last week, and U.S. regulators in attendance promoted the strength of the U.S. system in open discussions with supervisors from other nations.
The adoption of revisions to the principles, or ICP for "Insurance Core Principles, Standards, Guidance and Assessment Methodology" reflect globally-accepted framework to evaluate supervising authority under FSAP, the Financial Sector Assessment Program sponsored by the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund.
The update was a major objective of the IAIS as the new set of ICPS is based on developments in insurance markets and in supervision, and was last revised in 2003.
The principles update "takes into account experience gained from the FSAP assessments as well as recommendations issued by the G20 Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors and the Financial Stability Board," stated Peter Braumüller, chairman of the IAIS Executive Committee.
The IAIS ICPs, set out the fundamentals of effective insurance supervision, and are the basis of the FSAP program. Assessments are done on a rolling basis, and the United States' system of insurance regulation was most recently assessed in 2010, according to the NAIC.
The principle statements are the highest level in the hierarchy of the IAIS' supervisory material, with standards at the next level and guidance below that.